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C. E. Whitehead's



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    Mired in the Great Dismal Swamp


The Dismal Swamp Today--the Canal
(Image from Coastal Guide to North Carolina



Colonel William Byrd of Virginia's Proposal to Drain the Dismal Swamp
(Byrd suggests draining the Dismal Swamp and cultivating it using slave labor.
In his section entitled, "A DESCRIPTION OF THE DISMAL," Byrd describes trees that are found in swamp above--pine, white cedar, black berry bush which produces a black dye.)
Read more about Byrd's Original survey of the swamp, and the man himself.

Question for Thought:
Research cultivation methods below, at Land Use, Indians and the Land, and African Views of the Land;
What would happen to these trees if the swamp were cultivated?

 



Swampy Lore



Question for Thought:
Can you find similarities between any of these tales? Which ones? Which explanations for the lady in the lake do you like best, the natural phenomena explanation, or the story of the lost love? Or do you prefer a little of both?

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Work and Land Use in the Dismal



Question for Thought:
Compare descriptions of slave labor in these stories with what you have read in other accounts.

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Hiding Out in the Dismal

  • [In "1777, during the Revolutionary War"]
    [The Dismal Swamp was] infested by concealed royalists, and runaway negroes, who could not be approached with safety. They often attacked travellers, and had recently murdered a Mr. Williams.
    --1777 Traveller (In Crow, Jeffrey J.; Escott, Paul D.; and Hatley, Flora J., 1992, A History of African Americans in North Carolina. Raleigh, North Carolina Department of Cultural Resources/Division of Archives and History.)
  • [Runaway slaves are] perfectly safe, and with the greatest facility elude the most diligent search of their pursuers. [Blacks have lived in the Dismal Swamp] for upwards of twelve, twenty, or thirty years and upwards, subsisting themselves . . . upon corn, hogs, and fowls . . . . [The runaways cultivate "small plots of land that" are "not subject to flooding" and] perfectly impenetrable to any of the inhabitants of the country around.
    --1780's Traveller (In Crow, Jeffrey J.; Escott, Paul D.; and Hatley, Flora J., 1992, A History of African Americans in North Carolina. Raleigh, North Carolina Department of Cultural Resources/Division of Archives and History.)
  • Robert Arnold's Description of Runaway Slaves in the Dismal
  • Moses Grandy's Description of His Mother's Hiding Her Children in the Woods
  • Moses Grandy's Description of His Sister's Hiding in the Woods


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Plants and Animals of the Dismal



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Maps of the Ecosystem

Use these maps to create your journal or artifacts and visual images collection.



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Dismal Water Research



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More from Colonel William Byrd, Surveyor of the Dividing Line, Whose Team Measured the Swamp



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[Return to North Carolina Perspectives Home Page]
 

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